Retail sales see gains in August, reports U.S. Department of Commerce

Retail sales see gains in August, reports U.S. Department of Commerce

Summary

United States retail sales in August rose to $732.0 billion (seasonally adjusted), a 0.6% increase from July’s revised $727.4 billion and up about 5.0% year-on-year. The three-month period June–August climbed roughly 4.5% compared with the same period a year earlier.

The Commerce Department noted retail trade sales up 0.6% month-on-month and 4.8% year-on-year. Non-store retailers (including e-commerce) posted a strong 10.1% annual gain, while food service and drinking places rose 6.5% year-on-year.

The CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor (with Affinity Solutions) also recorded growth: total retail sales excluding autos and gasoline were up 0.5% sequentially (seasonally adjusted) and 6.81% annually (unadjusted). Its core measure (excluding restaurants as well as autos and gasoline) rose 0.26% month-on-month and 6.67% year-on-year. Through the first eight months of 2025, total sales are up about 5.08% and core sales up about 5.27% year-on-year.

Key Points

  1. August retail sales: $732.0 billion, +0.6% vs July (revised) and +5.0% year-on-year.
  2. Three-month (June–August) sales increased ~4.5% versus the same period a year earlier.
  3. Retail trade sales rose 0.6% month-on-month and 4.8% year-on-year.
  4. Non-store (e-commerce) sales showed a robust 10.1% annual increase.
  5. Food service and drinking places saw a 6.5% annual gain.
  6. CNBC/NRF data (ex-autos/gasoline): +0.5% sequential (seasonally adjusted) and +6.81% annually (unadjusted).
  7. Core retail (excl. restaurants, autos, gasoline): +0.26% month-on-month and +6.67% year-on-year.
  8. Drivers cited: stable employment, back-to-school spending, lower fuel costs, tax-free holidays and pre-buying ahead of tariff increases.

Context and relevance

For supply chain and logistics professionals, these figures matter: continued consumer spending supports freight volumes, warehousing demand and inventory turnover. The strong growth in non-store sales underlines ongoing e-commerce momentum, while higher spending on goods (and evidence of tariff-driven pre-buying) can shift sourcing and inventory strategies.

The data also reflect a mixed macro picture—stable employment supporting spending despite weaker-than-expected job growth—so planners should watch demand signals rather than assume uniform growth across categories.

Why should I read this?

Short answer: because this is the quick snapshot you need to tune operations. Consumers are still buying — e-commerce is strong, back-to-school lifted sales, and tariff worries are nudging buying patterns. If you work in distribution, transport or retail planning, these numbers help you justify capacity, adjust inventory and spot near-term demand shifts. We read the detail so you don’t have to.

Source

Source: https://www.logisticsmgmt.com/article/retail_sales_see_gains_in_august_reports_u.s_department_of_commerce

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